Schistosity is developed at elevated temperature when the rock is more strongly compressed in one direction than in other directions (
nonhydrostatic stress). Nonhydrostatic stress is characteristic of regional metamorphism where mountain building is taking place (an
orogenic belt). The schistosity develops perpendicular to the direction of greatest compression, also called the shortening direction, as platy minerals are rotated or recrystallised into parallel layers. While platy or elongated minerals are most obviously reoriented, even quartz or calcite may take up preferred orientations. At the microscopic level, schistosity is divided into
internal schistosity, in which inclusions within porphyroblasts take a preferred orientation, and
external schistosity, which is the orientation of grains in the surrounding medium-grained rock. The composition of the rock must permit the formation of abundant platy minerals. For example, the
clay minerals in mudstone are metamorphosed to mica, producing a mica schist. Early stages of metamorphism convert mudstone to a very fine-grained metamorphic rock called
slate, which with further metamorphism becomes fine-grained
phyllite. Further recrystallization produces medium-grained mica schist. If the metamorphism proceeds further, the mica schist experiences
dehydration reactions that convert platy minerals to granular minerals such as feldspars, decreasing schistosity and turning the rock into a gneiss. Other platy minerals found in schists include chlorite, talc, and graphite. Chlorite schist is typically formed by metamorphism of
ultramafic igneous rocks, as is talc schist. Talc schist also forms from metamorphosis of talc-bearing
carbonate rocks formed by
hydrothermal alteration. Graphite schist is uncommon but can form from metamorphosis of sedimentary beds containing abundant organic
carbon. This may be of
algal origin. Graphite schist is known to have experienced
greenschist facies metamorphism, for example in the northern
Andes. Metamorphosis of
felsic volcanic rock, such as tuff, can produce quartz-
muscovite schist. Thin section of garnet-mica-schist.jpg|Microscopic view of garnet-mica-schist in
thin section under polarized light with a large garnet crystal (black) in a matrix of quartz and feldspar (white and gray grains) and parallel strands of mica (red, purple and brown). Normal View of Garnet-Mica-Schist.JPG|View of cut garnet-mica-schist Schist.jpg|
Manhattan schist from southeastern New York State NY-Central-Park-Rock-7333.jpg|
Manhattan schist outcropping in New York City's
Central Park Talc-schist - Collezione mineralogica - Università dell’Insubria.jpg|Talc-schist from Saint-Marcel, Valle d'Aosta, Italy Dalupirip schist 02.jpg|Amphibole epidote schist with
slickensides from
Benguet, Philippines, showing epidote lens ==Engineering considerations==